english language jeopardy game

Post on 22-Jan-2018

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MeaningsHistory of

EnglishRegional

VariationsMaking of

EnglishA World

Language

10 10 10 10 10

20 20 20 20 20

30 30 30 30 30

40 40 40 40 40

50 50 50 50 50

Question 1 - 10

• A particular form of a language peculiar to a specific region or social group.

Answer 1 – 10

• What is a dialect?

Question 1 - 20

• A distinctive way of pronouncing a language, especially one associated with a particular country, area, or social class.

Answer 1 – 20

• What is an accent?

Question 1 - 30

• This English is the variety that is understood by writers and speakers worldwide.

Answer 1 – 30

• What is Standard English?

Question 1 - 40

• The language or dialect spoken by the ordinary people of a country or region.

Answer 1 – 40

• What is vernacular?

Question 1 - 50

• An indirect, less offensive way of saying something that is considered unpleasant or that people have trouble talking about openly.

Answer 1 – 50

• What is a euphemism?

Question 2 - 10

• It was in this year that Caxton introduced the printing press to England.

Answer 2 – 10

• What is 1476?

Question 2 - 20

• The Great Vowel Shift occurred during this period.

Answer 2 – 20

• What is Early Modern English?

Question 2 - 30

• This year began with Edward the Confessor on the throne and ended with William the Conqueror as King of England after he defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings.

Answer 2 – 30

• What is 1066?

Question 2 - 40

• The period in time from 1050-1450AD.

Answer 2 – 40

• What is Middle English?

Question 2 - 50

• Linguists have given this name to the period 500-1050AD.

Answer 2 – 50

• What is Old English?

Question 3 - 10

• This helps you identify where the speaker comes from.

Answer 3 – 10

• What is an accent?

Question 3 - 20

• This example of language variety is apparent when she says buttercup yellow, he says yellow, she says mint green and he says green.

Answer 3 – 20

• What is gender difference in language variation?

Question 3 - 30

• This example of language variety is influenced by background.

Answer 3 – 30

• What is an ethnic group?

Question 3 - 40

• “You are welcome.” vs “Youse are welcome.” and

• “We did everything required.” vs “We done it.” explains another cause of language variation.

Answer 3 – 40

• What is social class?

Question 3 - 50

• Language change can be broken into three main schools of thought.

Answer 3 – 50

• What is The Damp Spoon, The Crumbling Castle, and The Infectious Disease?

Question 4 - 10

• This tribe arrived in England about 600BC.

Answer 4 – 10

• What are the Celts?

Question 4 - 20

• The first invasion of Britain occurred around 43AD.

Answer 4 – 20

• What are the Romans?

Question 4 - 30

• Sailing across the North Sea to Britain, first invited in 420AD later invading in 460AD.

Answer 4 – 30

• Who are the Angles, Saxons and Jutes?

Question 4 - 40

• This tribe, sailing from Denmark, invaded Britain several times from 789AD to 878AD.

Answer 4 – 40

• Who are the Vikings?

Question 4 - 50

• During this period the English language underwent some major shifts. The heavy reliance of inflectional endings on words disappeared to be replaced by the word order we still .use today

Answer 4 – 50

• What is Middle English?

Question 5 - 10

• English has achieved this status as it has a special role recognised in every country.

Answer 5 – 10

• What is a global language?

Question 5 - 20

• The settling of America and the enslaving of black people from Africa to be transported to Southern America and the Caribbean islands.

Answer 5 – 20

• What is one reason English became a global language?

Question 5 - 30

• Britain led the Industrial Revolution and English was the language used for new inventions, trade and commerce. Adopters of the new technology also adopted the new terminology.

Answer 5 – 30

• What is a reason for English becoming a global language?

Question 5 - 40

• There were a large number of languages with each language often having a small number of speakers, no written record of the words of each of these languages and with colonisation English became the one language used for communication across Australia.

Answer 5 – 40

• What are the reasons for the loss of Aboriginal languages?

Question 5 - 50• Pidgin:– is a mixture of local words,

borrowed words and words from the colonising language,

– has a limited vocabulary,– has a reduced grammatical

structure,– uses repetitions like good-good

and talk-talk, and– has a narrow range of functions

(why it came into being), e.g.: able to communicate between groups with different languages

• Creole:– evolves from pidgin,– expands at a greater rate,– develops a complete

grammatical structure,– is used in bilingual

education and literature, and

– becomes the first / mother language of the children whose parents spoke pidgin

Answer 5 – 50

• What are differences between pidgin and creole?

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